Poland: Strikes sabotaged by "Solidarnosc"

A new and striking demonstration of the
sabo­taging role of trade unionism has just been given by the recent strikes in
Poland. Solidarnosc, presented everywhere as the emana­tion of the formidable
movement of the Polish workers in 1980, has, eight years later, openly
confirmed the real reason for its existence: to drag the workers back into the
grip of the na­tional capitalist institutions of Poland.

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Faced
with a movement that arose sponta­neously to demand wage rises against a whole
ac­cumulation of measures by the government, Solidarnosc deployed a veritable
panoply of maneuvers, worthy of the oldest tricks of the western unions. The
pupil has learned well from his teachers: the numerous meetings between Walesa
and his acolytes with various unions, es­pecially in France and Italy, have
borne fruit.

In 1980, in a matter of days, the
working class had by its own efforts managed to organize itself on the scale of
the entire country, on the basis of general assemblies in the facto­ries,
extending and unifying the movement, centralizing it in inter-factory
committees of dele­gates from the assemblies (the MKS), forcing the government
to come and discuss and negotiate publicly in front of all the workers. It took
over a year of the joint efforts of the govern­ment and of Solidarnosc, newly
constituted as a fireguard against the mass strike, to get the workers to toe
the line. This year, the ‘free and independent' union, carefully ‘tolerated'
since then by the government, and equipped with a by no means negligible
apparatus of contact and propaganda throughout the country, was this time able
to play its role as a social fireman in the service of the national capital.

At the
beginning of the movement, at the end of April, when the transport workers of Bygdoszcz,
then the steelworkers of the Nowa Huta works near Cracow, followed by those of
the Etalowa Wola steelworks, all came out on strike, they raised the hopes of
the whole working class, which was being subjected to a consider­able attack on
wages and working conditions. In a situation ruled by draconian rationing of
the most basic consumer goods, and where there had been announced price rises
of 40% on a number of essential goods and of 100% on electricity and gas,all
eyes were turned towards these strik­ers, who had put forward general demands
for all the workers, for the steelworkers, the hospital workers, and other
sectors. At this point, the leaders of Solidarnosc, Walesa and Kuron at their
head, disapproved of the strikes "which are acts of despair that are
understandable but that can only make things more difficult" (sic). They
advised the workers to call for "political reforms" and "free trade unions",
expressing open support for Gorbachev's ‘perestroika'.

The government had a division of labor
with Solidarnosc. It rapidly gave in to the demands of Bygdoszcz and Stalowa
Wola - because these enterprises were ‘competitive' - while putting some of the
leading figures in the union in prison for a few hours, in order to give more
credibility to their role as ‘opponents' of the regime, especially in front of
the young workers among whom Solidarnosc's appeals for moderation did not go
down at all well. Finally, faced with the growing solidarity of the workers, a
solidarity which has been a characteristic of the struggles in Poland since the
struggles of 1970, 1976, and above all 1980, the union did all it could to get
to the head of the movement. It supported the strikes at the Gdansk ship­yards,
which were the centre of the movement in 1980, and at the Ursus tractor factory
near Warsaw, in order to focus the whole push for solidarity on these two workers'
concentrations where it had a strong implantation, obviously to the detriment
of a real broadening of the move­ment. The maneuver worked well. Even though
there was a real solidarity among the workers of these factories, they were the
places where Solidarnosc had sufficient strength to get away with its tricks.
In Gdansk in particular, it proclaimed a ‘strike committee', nominated by
itself and not by the workers' assembly, a typi­cal maneuver of western ‘democratic'
unionism. It did the same thing at Nowa Huta where it set up its own ‘strike
committee' even though one had already been created under the control of the
workers. Finally, while the whole beginning of the movement had been marked by
unifying de­mands (for the indexing of wages with inflation, improvements in
health services, etc), the lat­ter disappeared as if by magic when Solidarnosc
arrived at the head of the movement, and gave way to the ‘democratic' demand
for the ‘reconstruction of the union'. Finally, having managed to regain
control of the situation, Solidarnosc could then allow itself to threaten the
government with a "general strike", in the event of "Jaruzelski sending the
zomos (militia) into
Nowa Huta"; but since Solidarnosc had al­ready reassured the government that it
had things under control, the latter had no need to do this.

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Despite
the considerable experience of strug­gle which the Polish workers have forged
in the last twenty years through three waves of strikes, they have only just
come up against the union barrier in the ‘oppositional' form that it takes in
the west. And this was all the more difficult for the workers in that, in the
east­ern bloc regimes, illusions in ‘free and inde­pendent' trade unionism are
very strong, and that in Poland Solidarnosc still has the appear­ance of a
direct product of the struggles of 1980.

The
answer to the obstacles which the Polish workers have just come up against lies
first and foremost in the deepening of the present strug­gles in the western
countries. It is in these countries that the bourgeoisie is strongest, is in
these countries where the ‘key' to domination over the international proletariat
can be found. And above all, for the develop­ment of experience and
consciousness in class, it is in these
countries that the working class itself is the most developed and is fronted
with the most sophisticated obstacles to the struggle, in particular the
obstacle trade unionism and its ‘radical' and ‘rank and file' varieties.

Despite
the retreat which they have be forced to make for the moment, the workers in Poland
have once again given the world prole­tariat an example of determination, of
combativ­ity, of active solidarity in taking up the struggle again seven years
after the bitter feat of 1981. The response to this example, real solidarity
with the workers of Poland, the strengthening of the struggle in the western countries,
its advance towards unification.